(Newser)
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The airline industry, an old hand at crisis aversion, is holding its own in the recession by cutting costs, along with fares, the Wall Street Journal reports. But higher prices to consumers—and a major shakeout—would be needed to get even close to profitability. The industry expects to lose $9 billion this year, the AP reports, and international passenger traffic dropped 9.1% in the first 3 months of this year compared to 2008.

The key issue: too little demand. Companies know how to make adjustments, like charging for checked bags even as ticket prices slump, and scoring concessions from staff. But these survival tactics won't work for the long run. "If airlines don't cut enough now, the industry will come out of the downturn with too much capacity to make money in the upturn,” says an analyst.

Study what happened to Aloha Airlines when go! (Mesa) came into the Hawaii market and basically drove them out of business flying tourists between Islands way below cost and posting huge losses for over a year. It was a travesty.

Robert_Dada

Jun 8, 2009 10:57 AM CDT

Raising prices will not address the low demand situation.

DeniseVB

Jun 8, 2009 3:42 AM CDT

Hmmmm, wonder how Southwest figures out how to make a profit? They give the public what they want, cheap flights from small airports ! It's my favorite airline :)